Kevin Bronstein is a software engineer with nine years of experience building full-stack and cloud-native applications, currently based in the Greater Barcelona area and working at Howdy.com. He has led engineering teams at SOUTHWORKS, combining technical planning, sprint management, and hands-on implementation across Node.js serverless platforms, Go microservices, and NoSQL databases. Kevin contributes to notable open-source work on the Windows Community Toolkit, improving UI components in XAML/C# and demonstrating comfort across front-end and backend concerns. He values honest communication, continuous learning, and constructive feedback, and often takes on the most complex tasks while enabling team growth. His background includes a mix of web, UWP, and PWA projects and a degree in Informatics from Universidad de Palermo, reflecting both practical breadth and formal training. An avid problem-solver, he brings curiosity and a pragmatic approach to merging cross-branch changes and long-lived open-source maintenance.
9 years of coding experience
6 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor of Science - BS Licenciatura en Informática, Bachelor of Science - BS Licenciatura en Informática at Universidad de Palermo
Technical High School oriented to IT and Digital Media Communications, Technical High School oriented to IT and Digital Media Communications at Escuela Tecnica ORT
The Windows Community Toolkit is a collection of helpers, extensions, and custom controls. It simplifies and demonstrates common developer tasks building .NET apps with UWP and the Windows App SDK / WinUI 3 for Windows 10 and Windows 11. The toolkit is part of the .NET Foundation.
Role in this project:
Full-stack Developer
Contributions:45 commits, 25 PRs, 18 pushes in 1 year
Contributions summary:Kevin primarily contributed to the UI of the Windows Community Toolkit, making fixes to existing components, specifically the MasterDetailsView and TextBoxRegEx controls, and implementing features for the WebView in WPF. The user also addressed issues and integrated changes across multiple branches, suggesting an understanding of code merging and version control. These changes involve modifications in XAML and C# files, indicating work in both the front-end and potentially the supporting C# backend.
Contributions:104 PRs, 117 pushes, 87 branches in 1 month
microsoft
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